|
Ashurbanipal, or Assurbanipal, (reigned 668 -
627 BCE), the son of Esarhaddon and
Naqi'a-Zakutu, was the last great king of ancient Assyria. He is famous as one of the few kings who could himself read and write. Assyrian sculture reached its
apogee under his rule (Northern palace and south-western palace at Nineveh, battle of Ulai).
He assembled "the first systematically collected library" at Nineveh. A library, in Oppenheim's view, apparently, was distinct from an archive: earlier repositories of documents had accumulated passively, in the course of administrative routine.
Tablets from the library of Nineveh preserve the most complete source for the
Sumerian/Babylonian Epic of Gilgamesh. Other sets of tablets
offer what is essentially a Sumerian/Akkadian dictionary. There are arcane astronomical/astrological texts. By far the largest group of tablets (almost
all of which are in the British Museum, London) however, are 'omen' texts that taught the scribes how to recognize the significance of portents.
Assurbanipal only became crown prince in 672, when Esarhaddon's oldest son Sin-iddina-apla died. Assurbanipal was very
unpopular with the court and the priesthood. Contracts were made with leading Assyrians, members of the Royal family and foreign
rulers to assure their loyalty to the crown prince. But it was only the energy of his mother Naqi'a-Zakutu that assured his
ascent to the throne when Esarhaddon suddenly died during his Egyption
campaign.
Ashurbanipal's reign, like that of most Assyrian kings was marked by incessant warfare. He began by making war on his brother
Shamash-shum-ukin, who had been installed as king in Babylon; Ashurbanipal conquered Babylon and destroyed it. Oppenheim notes the curious break
in all documentation during the final decade of his rule.
Oppenheim's dates for Ashurbanipal (as given here) are drawn from references in the inscription of the mother of Nabonidus. The date of his death is not known with certainty, the last tablet to mention
his name is a private contract from Nippur dated to 631, the 38th year of his rule.
Other texts say that he ruled 42 years, that is, till 627/626).
Reference
A. Leo Oppenheim, Ancient Mesopotamia: portrait of a dead civilization.
External links
|